The Turkish Cookbook By Musa Dagdeviren [updated] -
Dağdeviren has done more than write a cookbook. He has built a museum of taste. If you buy only one cookbook on the Middle East or the Mediterranean this decade, make it this one. Just clear your shelf—it is heavy enough to crush a simit. ★★★★★ (Essential) Best for: Adventurous cooks, food historians, lovers of lamb and eggplant. Hardest recipe: Çiğ börek (raw dumplings fried in a wok). Most surprising recipe: Kereviz dolması (stuffed celery root with walnuts).
A recipe for Manti (Turkish dumplings) requires you to roll dough to "1 mm thickness" and cut 1-cm squares. A recipe for Peynirli Börek requires you to hand-stretch phyllo until it is "as thin as a rose petal." There are no shortcuts. the turkish cookbook by musa dagdeviren
For most of the world, Turkish cuisine begins and ends with the doner kebab, the simit (sesame bread ring), and perhaps a glass of sweet, mud-like Turkish coffee. But for those who have traveled the Aegean coast or wandered through the spice bazaars of Istanbul, the country’s culinary landscape reveals itself to be one of the world’s great, underappreciated treasures—a complex tapestry woven from Byzantine, Ottoman, Armenian, Kurdish, and Mediterranean threads. Dağdeviren has done more than write a cookbook